Value and Man: Readings in PhilosophyMcGraw-Hill, 1966 - 445 頁 |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 68 筆
第 71 頁
... appear high to me , because they exceed my body's power to take them in its stride , and , even if I have just read ... appears high and up- right , the tree appears small and sloping ; and furthermore in the sense that they are not of ...
... appear high to me , because they exceed my body's power to take them in its stride , and , even if I have just read ... appears high and up- right , the tree appears small and sloping ; and furthermore in the sense that they are not of ...
第 103 頁
... appear as entitled to it in a Christian philosophy where , metaphysically speaking , man in no way belongs in the di- vine order . Hence this important consequence , that man was bound to appear to Augustine as a creature endowed with ...
... appear as entitled to it in a Christian philosophy where , metaphysically speaking , man in no way belongs in the di- vine order . Hence this important consequence , that man was bound to appear to Augustine as a creature endowed with ...
第 384 頁
... appear when seen through the filter of Eskimo language where , owing to the lack of transitive verbs , it is likely to be perceived as a sort of happening without an active element in it . ( In Green- landic one cannot say " I kill him ...
... appear when seen through the filter of Eskimo language where , owing to the lack of transitive verbs , it is likely to be perceived as a sort of happening without an active element in it . ( In Green- landic one cannot say " I kill him ...
內容
Knowledge as recollection The divided line | 5 |
Causality Free Will and Determinism | 31 |
A defense of necessary connection | 40 |
著作權所有 | |
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常見字詞
A. J. Ayer action Anytus argument Aristotle artist assertion Athenians beauty become behavior believe called capital punishment causal cause character common conceived concepts concerned culture death Descartes desire distinction divine doctrine effect emotion ence Epicurus ethical evidence evil existence experience explain expression fact false feeling give happiness human Iago idea individual judgment kind knowledge labour language laws logic mankind matter means means of production Meletus ment metaphysical mind moral motive nature never norms object opinion Othello passions person philosophers physical Plato pleasure poet possible principle problem production proposition punishment question R. G. Collingwood reason regard relation religion religious Rudolf Carnap scientific scientific method scientists sense social society Socrates soul speak statement suppose theonomous theory things thought tion Tragedy true truth understand University utilitarian verifiability virtue whole words